taxonomy the science of naming and classifying organisms chapter 17

44
Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Upload: merryl-james

Post on 14-Jan-2016

223 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Taxonomy

The science of naming

and classifying organisms

Chapter 17

Page 2: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Carl Linnaeus developed the scientific naming system still used today

• Binomial nomenclature is a two-part scientific naming system.• uses Latin words • scientific names always written in italics or

underlined• two parts are the genus name and species

descriptor

Page 3: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Tyto alba and Quercus alba

Are these species related?

Page 4: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Barn owl: Tyto alba

White oak:Quercus alba

Page 5: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• A genus includes one or more physically similar species.– Species in the same genus are thought to be

closely related.– Genus name is always capitalized.

• A species descriptor is the second part of a scientific name.– always lowercase– always follows genus name; never written

alone

Page 6: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• Ursus maritimus

Ursus maritimus Ursus arctos horribilis

(horribilis is the subspecies)

Page 7: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17
Page 8: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Match the Latin names with the descriptions

1. Big-horned sheep from Canada2. Bird with blue-green wings3. House sparrow4. Tree with large flowers5. Plant that has flower with six petals

(a) Cyanopica cyana(b) Passer domesticus (c) Ludwigia hexapetala(d) Ovis canadensis(e) Magnolia grandiflora

Page 9: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Scientific names help scientists to communicate.

• Some species have very similar common names.• Some species have many common names.

Page 10: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Linnaeus’ classification system has seven levels.

Page 11: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

How can you remember these levels?

1. Kingdom __________

2. Phylum __________

3. Class __________

4. Order __________

5. Family __________

6. Genus __________

7. Species __________

Page 12: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Cladistics is classification based on common ancestry.

• Phylogeny is the evolutionary history for a group of species.– evidence from living species, fossil record,

and molecular data– shown with branching tree diagrams

Page 13: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

-derived traits are shown with numbers 1-4- organisms are shown with letters A-D

Page 14: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Sample Cladogram

Page 15: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

1) Which traits do the Sinornis and Velociraptor share?

2) Which animal has arms as long as legs?

3) Does the Allosaurus have down feathers?

Page 16: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Make a cladogram for quarter, dime, nickel, penny

Page 17: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Make a cladogram

Alligator: amniotic egg, bones, four limbs, jaws, vertebrae

Frog: bones, four limbs, jaws, vertebrae

Gull: amniotic egg, bones, feathers, four limbs, jaws, vertebrae

Lamprey: vertebrae

Shark: jaws, vertebrae

Swordfish: bones, jaws, vertebrae

Page 18: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17
Page 19: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17
Page 20: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Dichotomous keys

Page 21: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

1 a) oval leaf: go to 2

b) lobed leaf: go to 5

2 a) leaf w/smooth edge: go to 3

b) leaf w/serrate or “sawtooth” edge: go to 4

3 a) leaf 10 to 15 cm long. . . . . magnolia

b) leaf 4 to 7 cm long . . . . . . . common pear

4 a) leaf 10 to 15 cm long . . . . Spanish chestnut

b) leaf 4 to 7 cm long . . . . . . white elm

5 a) four or five lobes: go to 6

b) many lobes: go to 7

Page 22: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

1 a) oval leaf: go to 2

b) lobed leaf: go to 5

2 a) leaf w/smooth edge: go to 3

b) leaf w/serrate or “sawtooth” edge: go to 4

3 a) leaf 10 to 15 cm long . . . . . magnolia

b) leaf 4 to 7 cm long . . . . . common pear

4 a) leaf 10 to 15 cm long . . . . . Spanish chestnut

b) leaf 4 to 7 cm long . . . . . white elm

5 a) four or five lobes: go to 6

b) more than 5 lobes: go to 7

Page 23: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

6 a) four pointy lobes . . . . . tulip tree

b) five pointy lobes: go to 8

7 a) lobes pointy . . . . . red oak

b) lobes rounded . . . English oak

8 a) star-shaped leaf . . . . sweetgum tree

b) leaf not star-shaped . . . Japanese maple

Page 24: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17
Page 25: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Common Latin noun endings

• -a, -us, -um, -ae, -i, -is, -o

Page 26: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Molecular clocks use mutations to estimate

evolutionary time.• Mutations add up at a constant rate in related species.

– As more time passes, there will be more mutations.

DNA sequence from ahypothetical ancestor

The DNA sequences from twodescendant species show mutationsthat have accumulated (black).

The mutation rate of thissequence equals one mutationper ten million years.

Mutations add up at a fairlyconstant rate in the DNA of species that evolved from a common ancestor.

Ten million years later—one mutation in each lineage

Another ten million years later—one more mutation in each lineage

Page 27: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• Mitochondrial DNA is used to study closely related species.

grandparents

parents

child

Nuclear DNA is inherited from bothparents, making it more difficult totrace back through generations.

Mitochondrial DNA ispassed down only from the mother of each generation,so it is not subject to recombination.

mitochondrialDNA

nuclear DNA

– mutation rate ten times faster than nuclear DNA– passed down unshuffled from mother to

offspring

Page 29: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Evidence for molecular clockin Hemoglobin

Quoll = Large carnivorous marsupial

Page 30: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

The current tree of life has three domains.

Page 31: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

Classification is always a work in progress. • The tree of life shows our most current understanding. • New discoveries can lead to changes in classification.

– Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae

Animalia

Plantae

Page 32: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

– Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae

– 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista

AnimaliaProtista

Plantae

Page 33: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

– Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae

– 1938: prokaryotes moved to kingdom Monera

– 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista

AnimaliaProtista

Plantae

Monera

Page 34: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

– Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae

– 1938: prokaryotes moved to kingdom Monera

– 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista

Monera– 1959: fungi moved to own kingdom

Fungi

Protista

Plantae

Animalia

Page 35: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

– Until 1866: only two kingdoms,Animalia and Plantae

– 1938: prokaryotes moved to kingdom Monera

– 1866: all single-celled organisms moved to kingdom Protista

– 1959: fungi moved to own kingdom

– 1977: kingdom Monerasplit into kingdoms Bacteria and Archaea

AnimaliaProtista

Fungi

Plantae

Archea

Bacteria

Page 36: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

The three domains in the tree of life are Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.

• Domains are above the kingdom level. – proposed by Carl Woese based on rRNA studies

of prokaryotes– domain model more clearly shows prokaryotic

diversity

Page 37: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17
Page 38: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• Domain Bacteria includes prokaryotes in the kingdom Bacteria.

– one of largest groups on Earth

– classified by shape, need for oxygen, and diseases caused

Page 39: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

– known for living in extreme environments

• Domain Archaea includes prokaryotes in the kingdom Archaea.

– cell walls chemically different from bacteria

Page 40: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes.– kingdom Protista

Page 41: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes.– kingdom Protista– kingdom Plantae

Page 42: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes.– kingdom Protista– kingdom Plantae– kingdom Fungi

Page 43: Taxonomy The science of naming and classifying organisms Chapter 17

• Domain Eukarya includes all eukaryotes.– kingdom Protista– kingdom Plantae– kingdom Fungi– kingdom Animalia